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Burkina Faso is phasing out the production of GM cotton introduced by Monsanto because growers are unhappy with the short length of its fibre

EXCERPT: “We’ve lost years because of this cotton,” said Mana Denis, a cotton farmer in the western city of Dedougou who welcomed the announcement. “They imposed it on us but it didn’t produce the desired effects,” he said.

Monsanto GM cotton seeds banned by top African producer of crop

Simon Gongo
Bloomberg, 14 April 2016
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-04-14/africa-s-top-cotton-producer-stops-growing-monsanto-s-gm-seeds

* Burkina Faso says producers unhappy with short length of fiber
* Acreage of GM cotton seeds to be phased out by 2018 crop

Burkina Faso is phasing out the production of genetically modified cotton introduced by Monsanto Co., the world’s largest seed company, because growers are unhappy with the short length of its fiber.

Africa’s biggest cotton grower is reducing the acreage for genetically modified cotton this season until it’s completely phased out in 2018 and replaced by conventional cotton, the West African nation’s cabinet said in a statement published late on Wednesday.

The results of a pilot project with Monsanto that began in 2003 “aren’t favorable in the sense that the length of the fiber after ginning has degraded and no longer responds to the needs of the market”, according to the statement.

The U.S. Foreign Agricultural Service said in a report earlier this month that Burkina Faso’s cotton producers had planned to meet with Monsanto in late March to try to solve the issue.

“We’ve lost years because of this cotton,” said Mana Denis, a cotton farmer in the western city of Dedougou who welcomed the announcement. “They imposed it on us but it didn’t produce the desired effects,” he said by phone on Thursday.

The 2016-2017 crop is estimated at 700,000 tons, the government said in the statement. Neighboring Mali is the region’s second-biggest producer, while Ivory Coast ranks third. Cotton is the nation’s second-biggest export after gold and accounts for 20 percent of shipments.